Working on mine like it used to. Weird glitch. I wonder if somebody hacked them?
Anya ,'Bring On The Night'
Buffistechnology 3: "Press Some Buttons, See What Happens."
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Google blog on what happened (summary: human error): "This site may harm your computer" on every search result?!?!
Financially there's no reason to keep our land line. We could save $100 a month if we bundle cable, internet and phone together. But I'm afraid that as soon as I ditch the land line there will be an emergency where I'll need it. What do you guys think?
I haven't had one since like 1999 and I've never had an issue.
We haven't had one in years, Laga, but I regretted it this past summer when the earthquake knocked out cell communication for a couple of hours. I don't know. I'd feel safer having one, but I haven't made it a priority yet.
OTOH? a natural disaster can knock out land lines for days, so...
And when a giant monster attacks, which gets disrupted more depends on the particular monster's smash-building/stomp-around-a-lot ratio.
OTOH? a natural disaster can knock out land lines for days, so...
I haven't been in one of those yet, but I've lost cell service more than once. Not counting me just not keeping the damned thing charged.
It's useful to have a very simple completely non-electric phone for those times when the electricity is out but the phone lines are working.
I'm nervous about giving up a landline and have never owned a cell phone but I have to say, my phone goes out 4 or 5 times per year from, believe it or not, squirrel damage. So, it seems that either solution has its potential limitations.
Plus, my landline phone is electric, so power outages can't be gotten around.